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Why a baseball team brought a master sommelier on board

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Evan Goldstein holds a unique role with the San Francisco Giants: He’s the very first master sommelier in professional sports, working to make sure the wines for sale at the team’s Oracle Park stadium pair perfectly with the hot dogs and other snacks for sale. 

Goldstein, 62, started this role last season. Goldstein grew up in the San Francisco area and is a lifelong fan of the team. He loved wine from an early age, and his first job was running the wine program at his mother’s restaurant, Square One. At 26 years old, Goldstein achieved master sommelier status. At the time, he was the youngest to ever be awarded that standing.

“It’s wine country,” Goldstein said. “Not only does that mean that you sort of had this DNA birthright to it, but it also means that our fan base here comes from those places.” 

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Evan Goldstein.

CBS Saturday Morning


The team has been selling wine at the stadium since 1977, and by hiring a master sommelier, they’re raising the bar to bring the best possible flavors to their fans. Goldstein sources all of the wines from the nearby area, since Oracle Park is smack in the middle of wine country, with plenty of options available.

“It was a really fun thing, right?” said the team’s chief executive officer Larry Baer. “The buzz around the park is ‘Sommelier and baseball?’ … We’d rather have good wine than mediocre wine. We’d rather have somebody who has been around a wine country for a whole career to help us select the wines.” 

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Evan Goldstein pairs wines with classic stadium foods for Dana Jacobson.

CBS Saturday Morning


Goldstein said that it’s been important to source a variety of wines and appeal to a wide range of tastes. He wants the wine he serves to be for everybody. “That to me was mission critical,” he said. ” There are delicious wines at $400 a bottle. There are delicious wines at $10 a bottle. And we want to make sure that people have access to that, because at the end of the day, if you like it and it makes you happy, that’s all that matters.” 

His method is working for most of the fans CBS News spoke to. 

“(I’m) meeting a friend, he’s not here yet,” said Debra Bogaards, one fan. “If he was here, we would have two beers, but since I got to buy it myself … I can’t resist a good glass of wine.”

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Fans taste wine at Oracle Park.

CBS Saturday Morning


Natasha Singh said she ordered a bottle of Alto Malbec ahead of the game she watched “because why not?” 

Some fans are still purists, preferring beers to wine, but Goldstein relishes the chance of reaching the skeptics.

“At the end of the season, if I can get them to stop for a moment and think about it, and maybe next time they’ll try it, or maybe they’ll try it again, we’ve done our job,” he said. 



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10/6: Face the Nation – CBS News

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10/6: Face the Nation – CBS News


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This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” as the world prepares to mark one year since the Hamas attack on Israel, Margaret Brennan speaks to UNICEF executive director Catherine Russell. Plus, Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina joins.

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Sen. Thom Tillis says “the scope” of Helene damage in North Carolina “is more like Katrina”

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As recovery missions and repairs continue in North Carolina more than a week after Hurricane Helene carved a path of devastation through the western part of the state, the state’s Republican Sen. Thom Tillis called for more resources to bolster the relief effort and likened the damage to Hurricane Katrina’s mark on Louisiana in 2005.

“This is unlike anything that we’ve seen in this state,” Tillis told CBS News’ Margaret Brennan on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Sunday morning. “We need increased attention. We need to continue to increase the surge of federal resources.”

Hurricane Helene ripped through the Southeast U.S. after making landfall in Florida on Sept. 26 as a powerful Category 4 storm. Helene brought heavy rain and catastrophic flooding to communities across multiple states, including Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia, with North Carolina bearing the brunt of the destruction. Officials previously said hundreds of roads in western North Carolina were washed out and inaccessible after the storm, hampering rescue operations, and several highways were blocked by mudslides. 

Tillis said Sunday that most roads in the region likely remained closed due to flooding and debris. Water, electricity and other essential services still have not been fully restored.

“The scope of this storm is more like Katrina,” he said. “It may look like a flood to the outside observer, but again, this is a landmass roughly the size of the state of Massachusetts, with damage distributed throughout. We have to get maximum resources on the ground immediately to finish rescue operations.”

Hurricane Katrina left more than 1,000 people dead after it slammed into Louisiana’s Gulf Coast in August 2005, flooding neighborhoods and destroying infrastructure in and around New Orleans as well as in parts of the surrounding region. It was the deadliest hurricane to hit the mainland U.S. in the last 50 years, and the costliest storm on record. 

The death toll from Hurricane Helene is at least 229, CBS News has confirmed, with at least 116 of those deaths reported in North Carolina alone. Officials have said they expect the death toll to continue to rise as recovery efforts were ongoing, and a spokesperson for the police department in Asheville told CBS News Friday their officers were “actively working 75 cases of missing persons.” 

On Saturday, the U.S. Department of Transportation released $100 million in emergency funds for North Carolina to rebuild the roads and bridges damaged by the hurricane.

“We are providing this initial round of funding so there’s no delay getting roads repaired and reopened, and re-establishing critical routes,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement. “The Biden-Harris administration will be with North Carolina every step of the way, and today’s emergency funding to help get transportation networks back up and running safely will be followed by additional federal resources.”     

President Biden previously announced that the federal government would cover “100%” of costs for debris removal and emergency protective measures in North Carolina for six months.

With North Carolina leaders working with a number of relief agencies to deal with the aftermath of the storm, Tillis urged federal officials to ramp up the resources being funneled into the state’s hardest-hit areas. The senator also addressed a surge in conspiracy theories and misinformation about the Biden Administration’s disaster response, which have been fueled by Republican political figures like former President Donald Trump.

Trump falsely claimed that Mr. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, his Democratic opponent in the November presidential election, were diverting funds from Federal Emergency Management Agency that would support the relief effort in North Carolina toward initiatives for immigrants. He also said baselessly that the administration and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, were withholding funds because many communities that were hit hardest are predominantly Republican. Elon Musk has shared false claims about FEMA, too.

“Many of these observations are not even from people on the ground,” Tillis said of those claims. “I believe that we have to stay focused on rescue operations, recovery operations, clearing operations, and we don’t need any of these distractions on the ground. It’s at the expense of the hard-working first responders and people that are just trying to recover their lives.”



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Face the Nation: Tillis, Tyab, Russel

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Face the Nation: Tillis, Tyab, Russel – CBS News


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Missed the second half of the show? The latest on… the damage caused by hurricane Helene, children in Gaza and Iran’s response to Israel.

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